Bevins Prize: Difference between revisions
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The '''Bevins Prize''' is a British award recognising outstanding [[investigative journalism]]. Established in 2008, it is named after the journalist [[Anthony Bevins]] (1942 - 2001)<ref>Colin Hughes, ''[[The Guardian]]'', 26 March 2001, [http://www.bevinsprize.org/ob-hughes.html Tony Bevins: Political editor whose reporting was instrumental in Margaret Thatcher's demise]</ref> and awarded by the Bevins Trust. Also known as the "Rat up a Drainpipe Award", the Prize's trophy is modelled on a drain pipe. |
The '''Bevins Prize''' is a British award recognising outstanding [[investigative journalism]]. Established in 2008, it is named after the journalist [[Anthony Bevins]] (1942 - 2001)<ref>Colin Hughes, ''[[The Guardian]]'', 26 March 2001, [http://www.bevinsprize.org/ob-hughes.html Tony Bevins: Political editor whose reporting was instrumental in Margaret Thatcher's demise] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090210194551/http://www.bevinsprize.org/ob-hughes.html |date=2009-02-10 }}</ref> and awarded by the Bevins Trust. Also known as the "Rat up a Drainpipe Award", the Prize's trophy is modelled on a drain pipe. |
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==Winners== |
==Winners== |
Revision as of 07:09, 19 July 2017
The Bevins Prize is a British award recognising outstanding investigative journalism. Established in 2008, it is named after the journalist Anthony Bevins (1942 - 2001)[1] and awarded by the Bevins Trust. Also known as the "Rat up a Drainpipe Award", the Prize's trophy is modelled on a drain pipe.
Winners
- 2008: Deborah Haynes
- 2009: Paul Lewis
- 2010: Clare Sambrook
References
- ^ Colin Hughes, The Guardian, 26 March 2001, Tony Bevins: Political editor whose reporting was instrumental in Margaret Thatcher's demise Archived 2009-02-10 at the Wayback Machine